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IDF will block Thunberg’s Gaza aid ship using ‘any means necessary’: Katz

One week into its voyage, and on the day that it was meant to reach Gaza’s shores, an aid ship piloted by 12 activists, including climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, has been warned not to go any further. In a post on X Sunday, June 8, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz wrote that he has “instructed the (Israel Defense Forces) to act so that the ‘Madleen’ hate flotilla does not reach the shores of Gaza – and to take any means necessary to that end.”

Raising international awareness

The Madleen, which departed from Sicily Sunday, June 1, is being operated by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition. Among its passengers are Thunberg, “Game of Thrones” actor Liam Cunningham, and Rima Hassan, a French-Palestinian member of the European Parliament who has been barred from entering Israel due to her pro-Palestinian messaging.

The crew said their goal is to raise “international awareness” over the ongoing hunger and humanitarian crisis in Gaza. At a press conference before they departed last week, Thunberg said, “We are doing this because, no matter what odds we are against, we have to keep trying.”

She added, “Because the moment we stop trying is when we lose our humanity. And no matter how dangerous this mission is, it’s not even near as dangerous as the silence of the entire world in the face of the live-streamed genocide.”

Israel vows to stop the ship

However, Katz has vowed not to let that happen. “Israel will act against any attempt to break the blockade or aid terrorist organizations – at sea, in the air and on land,” the IDF head said via X on Sunday.

Katz has claimed that the IDF is blocking the flotilla so that weapons don’t reach Hamas militants, saying, “The State of Israel will not allow anyone to break the naval blockade on Gaza, whose primary purpose is to prevent the transfer of weapons to Hamas.”

However, the coalition has stated that its cargo is “symbolic,” consisting of items such as baby formula and rice, Reuters reports. As of Sunday, the ship was still roughly 160 nautical miles off the coast of Gaza.

This is the Freedom Flotilla Coalition’s second attempt to break Israel’s naval blockade and bring humanitarian assistance into Gaza. In May, the activist group said its vessel was struck by a pair of drones while sailing near Malta. The group blamed Israel for the attack, which did not officially respond to the accusations.

Israel’s blockade plunges Gaza into famine-like conditions

After breaking a ceasefire agreement in March, Israel imposed a total blockade of all humanitarian assistance entering Gaza, effectively plunging much of the territory’s population into famine-like conditions. The region has been under a partial blockade since 2007, when Hamas assumed control of military operations in Gaza.

Israel ostensibly lifted its total blockade in May, though the flow of food and other necessities into the region has faced numerous setbacks.

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), an Israeli- and U.S.-backed group charged with distributing food to Gaza’s population of roughly 2 million people, has since paused those efforts, following numerous reports that Palestinians were being killed near its distribution sites. The GHF and IDF deny those reports, though eyewitnesses, medics, international aid organizations and others say the Israeli military is responsible.

The United Nations has warned of a growing risk of famine in Gaza as conditions worsen for the civilian population. The U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization said that as of May, Gaza’s residents are eating 67% of what a human body needs to survive.

“We are breaking the siege of Gaza by sea, but that’s part of a broader strategy of mobilizations that will also attempt to break the siege by land,” said Freedom Flotilla member Thiago Avila.

As Gen Z enters adulthood, let’s lay off the condescending articles

As greater numbers of a new generation begin to enter the pre-dawn hours of their middle age, it’s safe to assume that a cadre of journalists and experts representing Baby Boomers down to Millennials will come out of the woodwork to, at best, analyze and at worst, demonize their life choices. Spanning roughly 1997 to 2012, the oldest members of Gen Z are now well within the ranks of adulthood, and will presumably be painted with some of the same broadly derisive strokes that my generation, the Millennials, faced across the media landscape.

Case in point –– 49% of adult Gen Zers believe that planning for the future feels “pointless,” according to a recent poll by Credit Karma. At the same time, 58% of young adults surveyed by Intuit said that they are “integrating financial management into their overall wellness routines.”

So which is it? Are America’s youngest adults eschewing saving as an act of resistance, a silent protest against the volatile and unpredictable world they will soon inherit? Or have they successfully turned finances into a buzzy TikTok trend with real-world advantages?  

In short, Gen Z –– like any other demographic –– is not a monolith. Despite what a single article might tell you, it’s pretty difficult to pin down, and attempting to qualify Gen Z’s savings habits this early in their adult lives could be a fool’s errand in the first place.

As Nate Hoskin, the founder and lead financial advisor for Hoskin Capital, put it, “Millennials were the Gen Z before Gen Z—a generation without savings or retirement plans. Then over time, they grew into one of the best savings generations we’ve ever seen, despite limited governmental support and fewer robust employment opportunities that earlier generations, like the Baby Boomers, benefited from.”

Nevertheless, that hasn’t stopped some experts from diagnosing Gen Z with an acute  “YOLO mindset” –– a decidedly Millennial term that needs to be retired for good.

“There are a lot of financial implications in the long term if these young people aren’t planning for their financial future and [are] spending willy-nilly however they want,” Courtney Alev, a consumer financial advocate at Credit Karma, told CNBC.

However, a survey from the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America (TIAA) found that 84% of Gen Z put a portion of their paycheck aside each month, while 57% say they follow a budget. That doesn’t necessarily sound like “spending willy-nilly” to me.

Essentially, it could be argued that Gen Z is saving for the future, just not in the traditional way that generations before them would recognize. And that’s to say nothing of the 58% of Americans who, regardless of age or generation, doubt they’ll ever be able to save enough for retirement.

What’s more, it’s much easier to stash money in a retirement account when you have more disposable income to diversify. In the same Intuit survey, 76% of respondents said cost of living contributes to their financial stress, as well as 48% citing job instability and 46% pointing to escalating housing expenses.

“This is a generation that’s weathered pandemic isolation during formative years, entered an unstable economy, and faced skyrocketing housing and education costs — all while being told they’re not resilient enough,” said John Della Volpe, director of polling at Harvard Kennedy School Institute of Politics. “What Gen Z needs isn’t another lecture, but genuine recognition of their struggles.”